A Spitzer Survey of Protoplanetary Disk Dust in the Young Serpens Cloud: How do Dust Characteristics Evolve with Time?
Isa Oliveira, Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Bruno Merin, Ewine F. van, Dishoeck, Fred Lahuis, Vincent C. Geers, Jes K. Jorgensen, Johan Olofsson,, Jean-Charles Augereau, Joanna M. Brown

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer IRS spectra to analyze dust characteristics in protoplanetary disks within the Serpens Cloud, revealing dust evolution patterns and similarities across different star-forming regions over millions of years.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive mid-infrared spectral analysis of YSOs in Serpens, highlighting dust grain sizes, disk structures, and comparing these features across various environments and ages.
Findings
8% of disks have inner holes or gaps.
Dust grains in disks are at least a few micrometers in size.
Silicate feature characteristics are similar across different regions.
Abstract
We present Spitzer IRS mid-infrared (5-35 micron) spectra of a complete flux-limited sample (> 3 mJy at 8 micron) of young stellar object (YSO) candidates selected on the basis of their infrared colors in the Serpens Molecular Cloud. Spectra of 147 sources are presented and classified. Background stars (with slope consistent with a reddened stellar spectrum and silicate features in absorption), galaxies (with redshifted PAH features) and a planetary nebula (with high ionization lines) amount to 22% of contamination in this sample, leaving 115 true YSOs. Sources with rising spectra and ice absorption features, classified as embedded Stage I protostars, amount to 18% of the sample. The remaining 82% (94) of the disk sources are analyzed in terms of spectral energy distribution shapes, PAHs and silicate features. The presence, strength and shape of these silicate features are used to infer…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
